• calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m no keyboard enthusiast, only had 1, so I haven’t really felt what’s out there.

    My keyboard recently broke, so I bought a “wooting”. I had never heard of this brand, but I bought it since it’s the only one I saw that fit all the criteria:

    • Spanish layout
    • Big chonky ENTER key
    • 100% size
    • Backlit keys
    • Silent keys

    The silent keys part were a disappointment, it is way louder than the previous one (had cherry MX silent keys). However, the rest is pretty nice.

    It has detachable USB cable. You can choose if the cable exits from left, right or center. And the feel is pretty good.

    I don’t care about the analog keys. And I guess this is part of the reason of it being kinda pricey.

    The wrist rest I like, even though you have to buy it separately, it feels good and is silicone. So not too hard, and it doesn’t change shape under the weight of the wrist. I wish it could be physically attached to the keyboard though.

    It seems to be a European brand too, which is a big plus.

    Anyone else got a keyboard from this brand?

    EDIT: I almost forgot. It comes with some extra key switches. And I believe they are solderless-swappable. Which is kinda nice, since the last keyboard I had to replace just because of 2-3 broken keys.

  • Botzo@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    How did you commit to your first ergo?

    There are too many (mostly very expensive) options, and I’ve reached decision paralysis.

    I’ve been typing on a mech for over 10 years and lust after the concept, but can’t get past the perceived risk of buying something I won’t use.

    • wjrii@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Connectivity, firmware, mounting method (e.g. tray, gasket, etc.), weight (more is usually better unless you’ll be moving it around), and if you want to try to avoid a rabbit hole, included keycaps; the look would count under aesthetic, but people can have very strong opinions about the profile (aka the shape).

        • wjrii@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Generally, for a “normal” mechanical keyboard, just pay a few bucks extra to make sure it claims to have QMK and/or one of VIA or VIAL. The first is an open source firmware that, assuming the maker followed the license properly and released their code, allows for accessible updates and reflashing. The other two are actually WYSIWYG web/electron apps that run on top of specially configured QMK installs and allow you to change keymaps/macros/etc. on the fly without re-flashing. Some keyboard makers (almost exclusively Chinese companies at this point) are better citizens than others about their open source software, but for simple functionality you want to make sure they’re advertising that they use them.

            • wjrii@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Only the cheapest of cheap mech boards (or vintage boards with no adapter) will be completely unable to be re-mapped, but the closed-source firmwares and their apps are generally quite limited and unpleasant to use. Not the biggest deal in the world if you use a full size or “tenkey-less” that simply lops off the numpad, but it gets more and more important the smaller you go. Even the very popular “75%” keyboards can benefit from good software as people get strong opinions about what they want the right-hand column to do.

  • wjrii@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m going to be cramming a Pi Zero, a battery pack, a DIY custom keyboard, and a 9" touchscreen into some sort of 3D printed enclosure to make a “Writer Deck” built around the Wordgrinder low-distraction word processor. I’d like to keep the keyboard part somewhat integrated into the design and maybe around the footprint of a 60%, but what would y’all suggest as a good layout optimized for writing prose rather than code?

    Most of my favorite personal builds are variations on an FRL 1800 (here’s an example of a much nicer one than I make), but I can make any layout that’s physically practical and able to use normal keycaps.